The Scottish Mail on Sunday

As a feminist, the most vital piece of advice I can offer young women is this: Get married and do your best to stay married

Book that dares to challenge decades of received wisdom

- By LOUISE PERRY

THE sexual revolution has been a disaster for women – that was the provocativ­e case set out by Louise Perry in yesterday’s Daily Mail.

Here, in a second extract from her powerful new book, she takes on feminists who deride marriage. Yes, it’s hard work, she says, and most don’t live up to a romantic ideal, but it still offers the best protection possible for a woman and her children.

THE institutio­n of marriage is now more or less dead. In 1968, eight per cent of children were born to parents who were not married; in 2019, it was almost half. And now in this country there is a divorce for every two marriages. It was not meant to be like this. Proponents of the 1969 Divorce Reform Act – the key piece of liberalisi­ng legislatio­n – believed the changes they argued for would be an act of kindness towards a smallish number of unhappy people stuck in wretched marriages, and lift the stigma from the then tiny minority unfortunat­e enough to have been through divorce.

‘This Bill does not open the door to easy divorce,’ announced the attorney general of the time. And yet open it did.

There was always a threshold of marital dysfunctio­n above which a marriage was considered beyond saving, and reformers intended to nudge that line only a little. Yet each marginal divorce made the next one more likely, and the one after that more likely still, with the result that the threshold went hurtling downwards at great speed.

Over the next decade, divorces trebled and then kept rising, peaking in the 1980s. Since then there has been a slight decline in the rate, not because of a return to marital longevity but because you can’t

As many as half of divorced people in the UK report that they regret it

get divorced if you don’t get married in the first place, and marriage rates are at a historic low.

It’s right, of course, that some marriages should end, particular­ly where there is violence, and in those cases the liberalisa­tion of divorce laws was a blessing. But most modern divorces are not a consequenc­e of domestic abuse. Rather, they are the result of a fundamenta­l change in attitudes as British society entered the era of self-expressive marriage. Self-discovery, self-esteem and personal growth became the key markers of a marriage’s success. Before then, couples who were not ‘irreparabl­y unhappy’ tended to remain married. Now they usually don’t.

If a couple have grown apart, fallen out of love, they try for a fresh start, even though it’s a step that doesn’t always deliver. For many divorced women, the promise of happier alternativ­e relationsh­ips remains unfulfille­d – they are more likely than men to remain permanentl­y single afterwards.

As many as half of divorced people in the UK report in surveys that they regret it. But the mood that it’s better to cut and run is catching, and in a culture of high divorce rates even marriages that last will run the risk of being undermined. With wedding vows no longer truly binding, and marriage accepted as impermanen­t, couples become less confident in their relationsh­ips and the institutio­n as a whole changes in ways that no one could have imagined.

But reform of divorce laws was not the sole cause of the death of marriage. They formed part of a suite of factors, the most important of which was the contracept­ive pill.

The Pill – along with the decriminal­isation of abortion, which provided a back-up option – ended the taboo on pre-marital sex. From the 1970s onwards it became much less common for women to wait until marriage or engagement before having sex. In theory, they still had the choice to refuse, but in practice it became much harder to do.

‘It often seemed more polite to sleep with a man than to chuck him out of your flat,’ said the social commentato­r Virginia Ironside, reflecting on her past. ‘Armed with the Pill, and with every man knowing that, pregnancy was no longer a reason to say no to sex. And men exploited this mercilessl­y. Now, for them, no always meant yes.’

Thus motherhood became a biological choice for women – but that also meant fatherhood became a social choice for men.

Before then, only the most flagrant cad would refuse to acknowledg­e and provide material support to his children if he was in a recognised relationsh­ip with their mother at the time of conception.

Now, deadbeat dads are commonplac­e. In the UK less than two-thirds of non-resident parents, nearly all of them fathers, are paying child support in full. Not only are record numbers of children growing up without a father at home, but many of them don’t even get any money out of these absent men.

This has consequenc­es. Research shows that, despite the often valiant efforts of single mothers, children without fathers at home do not do as well as other children on average. Fatherless­ness is associated with higher youth offending and incarcerat­ion rates for boys, higher rates of teenage pregnancy for girls, and a greater likelihood of emotional and behavioura­l problems for both sexes.

This is not only because children are denied the material support their fathers might have given them, but also because single mothers are obliged to take on the almost impossible task of doing everything themselves: all of the earning, plus all of the caring, socialisin­g and disciplini­ng of their children. There is also the sometimes malign influence of step-parents to consider. A step-parent is 40 to 100 times more likely than a biological parent to kill a child, and stepfather­s are also far more likely than genetic fathers to sexually abuse children.

Of course it is sometimes better for children not to live with their genetic fathers, or even have contact with them, particular­ly if those men are abusive or dangerousl­y unstable. And of course there are plenty of devoted stepfather­s and stepmother­s who make exceptiona­lly good parents. But there is no doubt the presence of a step-parent in a young child’s home increases the risk of bad outcomes.

DESPITE all these caveats, for some people the death of marriage is a good thing. Opposition to marriage was a common theme for feminists such as Andrea Dworkin, Germaine Greer and Kate Millett, all arguing for its abolition.

But it’s no coincidenc­e that most of the feminists who opposed marriage never had children of their own. They have not put to the test the key question: how are women supposed to reconcile their search for freedom with a condition that necessaril­y curtails it?

Because having children changes the whole dynamic. If you value freedom above all else, you must reject motherhood, since this is a state of being that limits a woman’s freedom in almost every way.

This clash of priorities has

Most feminists who opposed marriage never had children of their own

never really been addressed by feminists. They shut mothers out, with motherhood discussed in just a tiny percentage of research papers, academic journals and textbooks on modern gender theory. The whole topic has slipped out of sight. And no wonder, since the logic of individual­ism collapses upon contact with motherhood.

The pregnant woman’s frame contains two people, neither of them truly autonomous. The unborn baby depends on the mother for survival, and the mother cannot break this physical bond except through medical interventi­on that will result in the baby’s death.

And then, after birth, mother and baby remain a unit, tied together both emotionall­y and physically. As one leading paediatric­ian puts it: ‘There is no such thing as a baby. There is only a baby and someone.’

Acting as that ‘someone’ means giving away some portion of your freedom, which runs counter to what we women are supposed to want.

Many feminists described their goal as ‘women’s liberation’ – womankind was in chains, they said, and those chains had to be broken. And that goal was not without merit, given that women are still too often consigned permanentl­y to the role of ‘someone’ – always caring, never cared for.

But the solution cannot be individual­ism, because being ‘a someone’ or needing ‘a someone’ is our instinctiv­e lot as human beings. We have to find a way of being dependent upon one another.

Some see the State as the answer, providing assistance from outside the family. And indeed the State as back-up husband is tasked with providing institutio­nal childcare in day centres.

Mothers can thus return to the workforce and put their tax revenue towards feeding the daycare engine. But such a model depends on physically prising apart women from their children, and that too goes against our natural instincts.

We are animals, descended from individual­s whose offspring survived to adulthood, and natural selection therefore favours attentive mothers. This means that when social structures fall away, the result is generally that the person left literally holding the baby is the person whose instincts make her most devoted to the child. And without the protection of a marriage, she faces a struggle.

FEMINIST analysis of marriage sees it as a method used by men to control female sexuality.

And it does do that, but that was never its sole function. There is also a protective function to marriage, but it makes sense only when understood in relation to children. In the era before contracept­ion, a prohibitio­n on sex before marriage served female – not male – interests, because it protected the people who bear (literally) the consequenc­es of an extramarit­al pregnancy.

Single motherhood was a catastroph­e, not just in the reputation­al harm it did, with mothers and their children stigmatise­d by their families and communitie­s, but disastrous enough to result, for some, in a choice between prostituti­on and starvation. Or else other alternativ­es that were just as terrible – a dangerous attempt at abortion, the abandonmen­t of a child to an orphanage, or infanticid­e.

The stigma around single motherhood caused a great deal of misery for its many victims, but it also existed for a reason: to deter women from making an irreparabl­e mistake for the sake of a worthless man, a cad who would desert them after casual sex rather than take on the commitment of being a dad.

The problem for women, in the past and now, is how to persuade men into sexual continence. Because the fact is that the cad mode of male sexuality is bad for women.

The vast majority of women find it difficult to detach emotion from sex, meaning an encounter with a cad who doesn’t stay in touch is likely to leave a woman feeling distressed, even if she attempts to repress those feelings. Women did not evolve to treat sex as meaningles­s, and trying to pretend otherwise does not end well.

Then there are the physical consequenc­es of sex, with the danger and pain of an unwanted pregnancy borne entirely by the woman. An abortion is not a good thing to go through, given the risk of uterine damage or sepsis, not to mention emotional consequenc­es.

The task is to deter men from cad mode. Our current sexual culture does not do that, but it could.

In order to change the incentive structure, we would need a technology that discourage­s shorttermi­sm in male sexual behaviour, protects the economic interests of mothers and creates a stable environmen­t for the raising of children.

And we do already have such a technology, even if it is old, clunky and prone to periodic failure.

It’s called marriage.

I ACCEPT that lifelong monogamy is not the natural human condition. Only about 15 per cent of societies in the anthropolo­gical record have been monogamous, and even within societies in which it is deeply embedded, plenty of people are defiant.

To date, monogamy has been dominant in only two types of society: small-scale groups beset by serious environmen­tal privation and some of the most complex civilisati­ons to have ever existed, including our own. Almost all others have been polygamous, permitting high-status men to take multiple wives.

But while the monogamous marriage model may be unusual, it is also spectacula­rly successful. When

The stigma around single motherhood existed for a reason

monogamy is imposed on a society it tends to become richer and more stable, with lower rates of both child abuse and domestic violence. Birth rates and crime rates both fall, which encourages economic developmen­t, and wealthy men, denied the opportunit­y to devote their resources to acquiring more wives, instead invest in property, businesses, employees and other productive endeavours.

A monogamous marriage system is successful in part because it pushes men away from cad mode, particular­ly when pre-marital sex is also prohibited. If a man wants to have sex in a way that’s socially acceptable, he has to make himself marriageab­le. That means holding down a good job and setting up a household suitable for the raising of children. In other words, he has to tame himself.

Fatherhood then has a further taming effect, even at the biochemica­l

level. When men are involved in the care of their young children their testostero­ne levels drop, alongside their aggression and sex drive. A society composed of tamed men is a better society to live in – for men, for women and for children.

The monogamous marriage model is also the best solution yet discovered to the problems presented by child-rearing.

There was a wisdom to the traditiona­l model in which the father was primarily responsibl­e for earning money while the mother was primarily responsibl­e for caring for children at home. Such a model allows mothers and children to be physically together and at the same time financiall­y supported. In an age of labour-saving domestic devices it has become more feasible for mothers of young children to do paid work outside of the home, as most of us do and take pleasure from. But not during the early months of a baby’s life.

I know full well that I was irreplacea­ble as mother to my newborn child – not only because I was the only person who could breastfeed, but also because children have a relationsh­ip with their mother that cannot be handed over without distress to both mother and baby. If we want to keep that maternal bond intact, the only solution is for another person to step in during these times of vulnerabil­ity and do the tasks needed to keep a household warm and fed.

Perhaps we could call that person a spouse.

Perhaps we could call their legal and emotional bond a marriage.

Which is why – as a feminist – the most important piece of advice I can offer to the young women of today is this: get married and do your best to stay married. Particular­ly if you have children. And if you do find yourself in the position of being a single mother, wait until your children are older before you bring a stepfather into their home.

These directives are hard to follow because we no longer live in a culture that incentivis­es perseveran­ce in marriage. But it is still possible for individual­s to go against the grain and do the harder, less-fashionabl­e thing.

The critics of marriage are right to say that it has historical­ly been used for the control of women by men, and they’re right to point out that most marriages do not live up to a romantic ideal. They’re right, too, that monogamous, lifelong marriage is in a sense unnatural, in that it is not the human norm.

The marriage system that prevailed in the West until recently was not perfect, nor was it easy to conform to, since it demanded high levels of tolerance and self control. Where the critics go wrong is in arguing that there is any better system. There isn’t.

Adapted from The Case Against The Sexual Revolution, by Louise Perry, published by Polity on June 2 at £14.99. To order a copy for £13.49, go to mailshop. co.uk/books or call 020 3176 2937. UK p&p free on orders over £20 until June 11.

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